Has Hollywood golden boy Timothée Chalamet lost his shine?
6 hours ago Ian YoungsCulture reporter Timothée Chalamet was, until very recently, Hollywood's golden boy and a frontrunner to win an Oscar this weekend - so is the backlash he has faced about more than his views on ballet and opera? When Chalamet recently said "no-one cares" about ballet or opera any more, he clearly wasn't expecting people to care enough about the remarks to ignite a furore.
"He's an absolute fool," theatre critic and arts broadcaster Ian Brown told BBC Radio London on Saturday.
"I just think he's ridiculous, and I suspect that will come back to haunt him. "
Meanwhile, pop culture podcast The Spill titled its new episode "Why we're officially done with Timothée Chalamet", and posed the question: "Has the Timothée era officially come to a screeching halt?"
"I don't want to be working in ballet or opera or things where it's like, 'Keep this thing alive even though no-one cares about this any more'," he said.
"I just lost 14 cents in viewership.
Damn, I just took shots for no reason. " Ballet and opera artists and companies mounted a strong defence.
"Shows a lot about his character. " Some also smartly capitalised on the attention, with Seattle Opera offering 14% off tickets to Carmen using the promo code TIMOTHEE. "Timmy, you're welcome to use it too," they said. Opera and ballet have devoted audiences, but there may have been some basis in Chalamet's point.
An official survey of arts attendance in the US, carried out every five years, showed that just 0.
7% of the population went to the opera at least once in 2022, down from 2.
Ballet and other live dance declined from 8.
7% over the same period. While some have accused Chalamet of punching down, he could be speaking from a position of knowledge - he has previously talked glowingly about his grandmother, mother and sister all being dancers. The timing of his comments probably played a part in the backlash, with the Oscars fast approaching, and Chalamet nominated for best actor for Marty Supreme. His remarks started attracting attention early last week, and the reaction snowballed as the week went on.
That it coincided with the end of Oscar voting may or may not have been a coincidence.
Club Chalamet, his biggest fan account, claimed it was a "smear campaign" to dent his chances.
Losing momentum Variety's London bureau chief Alex Ritman says the controversy peaked after Oscar voting closed, so probably won't have "any great impact" on the outcome.
Rehna Azim, awards editor for Movie Marker magazine, is on "Team Timothée".
"I think it's good that Timothée has said something interesting instead of the same bland, safe answers that many actors give," she says.
"I think he should still get his Oscar.
I think he deserves it.
"Everyone has had too many opportunities to be in front of a microphone talking about whatever's on their mind, and we're running out of things to say. "
Not everything that blows up during the Oscars race is down to dirty tricks, he believes.
"I don't think that the Oscar strategists are that powerful. "
"So now he comes off as young and obnoxious, and no one's going to rush to give a young, obnoxious person the best actor award. So I don't think it's gone quite right for him. "
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